Determined to rebound from an 8-2 shellacking in Game 5, the Penguins capitalized on a puckhandling gaffe by Roloson to snatch the lead at 8:23 of the first period. Max Talbot pounced on the loose puck and fed a backhand pass to Pascal Dupuis in the slot. “Super Duper” snapped the puck home for his first goal of the series.

Buoyed by their stroke of good fortune, the Pens controlled the tempo until Kris Letang drew an interference penalty at 14:28. Once again, the Lightning’s high-octane power-play unit dominated the Pens’ game but outmatched penalty killers. Seconds after the penalty expired, Teddy Purcell gathered in a deflection off of Steve Downie’s skate and drilled the game-tying goal past Marc-Andre Fleury.

The opportunistic Lightning grabbed the lead early in the second period, thanks to a brilliant individual effort by Dominic Moore. Skating behind the Penguins’ net, Moore made a terrific pass against the grain to set up Sean Bergenheim, who popped the puck past Fleury from the side of the cage.

Down but far from out, “the Peskies” refused to fold. At 9:32 they had a golden opportunity to tie the game when Chris Conner was awarded a penalty shot after being hauled down by Pavel Kubina. The speedy Pens’ winger—who narrowly missed on a pair of glorious chances earlier in the period—scooted toward Roloson but lost control of the puck.

Nonplussed, the Penguins continued to press the attack. Their hard work finally paid dividends at 3:48 of the third period. Tyler Kennedy shoveled the puck up the boards to Matt Niskanen, who flipped a pretty backhand pass to Jordan Staal in the high slot. The big center rifled the puck past Roloson to tie the score at 2-2.

The turning point came moments later when Talbot and Dupuis broke free in front of the Lightning net, only to be denied on three rapid-fire chances by Roloson. Tampa Bay quickly countered, as Downie slipped behind Paul Martin and Zbynek Michalek and beat Fleury for the go-ahead goal.

Aided by a penalty to Ryan Malone, the black and gold regrouped for a final charge. While working with the man advantage Mike Rupp unleashed a hard shot from point-blank range, but Roloson made another huge save. Malone, who was a physical force against his ex-teammates all night long, drove the final nail into the Pens’ coffin at 9:34 when he blew a slap shot past Fleury on a breakaway.

Despite the tough loss, the Penguins remain upbeat.

“We’ve played them hard all series long,” James Neal said. “It comes down to one now. Lay it out on the line … do what we can, and come out with the win.”

“We know we can play,” Fleury added. “I’m still positive and think we can do it.”

Ice Chips

Steve Downie (1 goal and 2 assists) earned the No. 1 star … The Penguins out-shot the Lightning 29-21 … Tyler Kennedy registered a game-high six shots … The Lightning dominated the Pens in faceoffs (35-23) and hits (28-21) … Marc-Andre Fleury allowed 8 goals on 35 shots (.771 save percentage) in Games 5 and 6 … The Pens have a series record of 1-11 when they lose Game 6.

On Deck

The Penguins and Lightning square off for the series finale Wednesday night at CONSOL Energy Center.

*Be sure to check out Rick’s book, “Total Penguins,” at TriumphBooks.com. A complete and comprehensive book on the team’s rich and colorful history, it’s filled with season-by-season summaries, player profiles and stats, bios on coaches, general managers and owners, photos from the “Post-Gazette” archives, and much, much more. A must have for any true Penguins fan.

4 Comments

If you were Coach Bylsma, what would you say to the team? I would say, “You all are letting the Naysayers get to you. You are nothing without Crosby! This team can’t make it to the 2nd round without Crosby.” Whoever wants it more will win game 7. GO PENS! Also, if I was the Coach watching the Power Play with the team, I would say…”Nice pass. Nice pass. Nice pass. Nice pass. Nice pass. SHOOT THE PUCK!!!!” I think they beat themselves last night.

With all due respect, I really don’t think the Pens let what others say influence them. I just think they’ve run into a very good, skilled hockey team (the Lightning didn’t get 103 points by being pushovers). Having said that, I too, think the Pens can win Game 7. If they can dictate the tempo without taking penalties, I think they have a good chance. A big game from Fleury would be huge. Regarding the power play, early in the series they were shooting before establishing position in the Tampa zone. Now they’re getting into position but not shooting. It all stems from a lack of confidence. Nothing a timely goal wouldn’t cure …

I understand they are professional. However, that is all the media talks about. They can’t get to the next round or anywhere without Crosby. You hear it over and over and over. However, as I said before, I think they beat themselves last night. Felt like they were playing an elimination game, not Tampa. I think we can pull it out though. Sit Kovie for Game 7. GO PENS!